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Peru Eager To Resume Missionary Hunt   Syndicate Poppies.org Content with XML Click here to post this article to your Blogger
Posted by ajones -- September 10, 2001

LIMA, Peru ( AP ) -- Peru plans to urge Secretary of State Colin L.  Powell to resume the U.S.-backed antidrug flights suspended after the Peruvian air force mistakenly shot down an American missionary plane this spring.

Powell is scheduled to visit Lima on Monday and Tuesday for an assembly of the Organization of American States.

Foreign Minister Diego Garcia Sayan said Peruvian officials would ask for clarification of "the dates and conditions in which aerial drug-interdiction flights could restart."

The missionary plane was shot from the sky April 20 after it was initially identified as a possible drug flight by a CIA-operated surveillance plane and then fired on by a Peruvian military jet.  A Baptist missionary, Veronica Bowers, and her 7-month-old daughter, Charity, were killed.

Results of a U.S.-Peruvian investigation released Aug.  2 found that an overloaded communications system, procedural errors, and translation problems between the English-speaking CIA-hired crew and Spanish-speaking air-force pilots had contributed to the tragedy.

When the report was issued, Maj.  Gen.  Jorge Kisic, operations chief of Peru's air force, said Peru's skies had been "inundated by narcotics traffickers" since the surveillance and interception flights were halted over Peru and Colombia.

However, U.S.  Assistant Secretary of State Rand Beers, who headed the American side of the investigative commission, said no evidence of increased trafficking had been seen.

Congress and the Bush administration are waiting for a follow-up report being prepared by Morris Busby, a former U.S.  ambassador to Colombia, before deciding whether to resume the flights.  The report is not expected for several weeks.

Colombian President Andres Pastrana, who is scheduled to meet Powell later Tuesday and Wednesday, also urged Washington to restart the interdiction program and reestablish intelligence sharing about suspected drug flights. 

Source: Philadelphia Inquirer

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